Lieberman’s Last Stand: Scare Tactics

Posted on Aug 7, 2006

With mere hours to go before the Connecticut primary vote, Sen. Joe Lieberman said a victory for challenger Ned Lamont would send a message to the country: ?In the Democratic Party, there?s no room for strong-on-security Dems.?

Actually, a victory for Lamont would send a message that there’s no room in the party for Dems who coddle President Bush as he exploits the so-called war on terror to launch imperialist misadventures.

National Review Online:

This afternoon at the Rajun Cajun restaurant in Hartford, Joe Lieberman told reporters that he was pleased at a recent Quinnipiac poll that showed his opponent?s lead down from 14 points to only six. With the primary election mere hours away, Lieberman made many of the same points that he made in a major campaign speech last night. He said:

I soul-search everyday on Iraq, and maybe what I didn?t do enough in this campaign is convey that? of course I want to bring our troops home, but I want to bring our troops home in victory and honor. That?s what we need, and that?s what they deserve.

Lieberman said that this race is about whether the Democratic Party ?will accept a diversity of opinion? on national security. He defined himself as a Democrat in the mold of John F. Kennedy, Harry S Truman and Bill Clinton ? that is, one with ?a real socially progressive record, and strong on national security.?

He said a victory for Lamont will send a message to the country: ?In the Democratic Party, there?s no room for strong-on-security Dems.? He said that would be disastrous for the Democrats. ?You can?t win in this country,? he said, ?unless you assure people” that you aren?t going to compromise on national security. He said he has backed the war on terror because he never forgets about the ?radical Islamic terrorists who attacked us on 9/11 and want to do it again.?